Tomas Stokke is a co-founder of Haptic. He has previously established and led the Oslo-based office, Arkitekturverkstedet. Prior to that Tomas co-founded the London office Metropolitan Workshop. He is educated at the Bartlett, University College London.

He has led several large scale projects within a variety of sectors and has extensive international experience. He leads Haptic’s airport projects and is also responsible for the Scandinavian projects in the practice. Tomas has been a key member of the team for Istanbul International Airport, Arctic Circle Airport, Hanimaadhoo Airport, Arctic Ocean Airport and the competition winning entry for Riga International Airport.

Tomas has taught, lectured, exhibited and been published internationally and has experience in international jury work.

Tomas is a member of the Van Alen Institute’s International Council www.vanalen.org

Scott Grady graduated from the Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London in 2003 and co-founded Haptic Architects in 2009. Scott has previously run design unit 7 at the Bartlett, along with fellow Director Tomas Stokke. He continues in his role as educator, attending crits at UCL, Greenwich & other London schools, whilst working as a Design mentor at Oxford Brookes.

Formerly an Associate at Hamiltons, Scott has headed up a number of large residential-led mixed use projects, offices and masterplans, including Indescon Court a major urban regeneration scheme in the Isle of Dogs and 190 Strand in Westminster; an entire urban block adjacent to the Inns of Court in Temple.

Scott has led many of Haptic's larger UK projects, including a variety of housing schemes and mixed use masterplans. He led Haptic’s eco-resort projects and is currently working on Oaks in the Czech Republic. Scott is also responsible for the financial aspects of the practice.

Scott is a member of the Van Alen Institute’s International Council www.vanalen.org

Nikki studied interior architecture at the Chelsea College of Art and Design in London and architecture at the Royal Danish Art Academy in Copenhagen and University of Sydney, Australia. In addition he studied furniture design at the Oslo Academy of Art.

Nikki combines architecture, interior architecture and furniture design to create unpretentious, tailor made, and joyful projects. Nikki’s approach has been used to great effect within numerous sectors such as residential, commercial, restaurants, retail, furniture design and industrial design. Among Nikki’s projects are the Thommessen meeting room suite, iPort technology center for Aker Solutions in Stavanger, and award winning WeSc-Concept Store in Oslo.

Nikki has headed up projects for Haptic such as the 300-room conference hotel for Nordic Choice – 'Quality Hotel Expo' and a technology center - ‘Engineerium’ – for Aker Solutions, both at Fornebu, outside Oslo. Nikki has worked as a jury member in design competitions and has taught at the Oslo Institute of Design.

Timo is a co-founder of Haptic. He has previously worked in architectural practices in Switzerland, Austria, Germany and England. He has been involved in projects of varying size, from Opera houses to large-scale housing projects.

Timo studied at Kingston University and the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. He has taught at the Metropolitan University of London and at the University of Brighton.

At Haptic, Timo has led several large scale projects within a variety of sectors, including a number of residential projects across Europe and in the UK.

Dimitris completed his studies at the Bartlett School of Architecture with Distinction. He has previously worked at Wilkinson Eyre Architects, CRAB Studio and Arup Associates where he gained experience working on complex projects with a strong sustainability agenda.

Dimitris joined Haptic in March 2014 and has since then worked on a variety of projects from concept to construction. Projects include the conference hotel in Straume, Istanbul Grand Airport, Television Centre Apartments and Mo I Rana Airport. He is currently project architect for the Rawlings residential development in Chelsea. He was promoted to Associate in 2017.

Dimitris acts as a mentor to staff at Haptic who partake their professional exams. He is a third year technical tutor at the Bartlett School of Architecture and a visiting lecturer at Central St Martins College.

Lucia began her career in Barcelona where she graduated at the ETSAB. Here she gained valuable experience working in conservation areas developing projects in both residential and hospitality sectors at Area Urbana.

After moving to London, Lucia joined Piercy & Company where she became a key member of the studio, working on a wide range of projects across all sectors. Amongst others, these include a large mixed used development of residential, retail and commercial typologies for Argent at Kings Cross, a commercial scheme for LandSec in Southwark and a collection of small residential commissions for private clients.

Lucia joined Haptic Architects in 2018, forming part of the team delivering a multi-purpose leisure pavilion for Argent at Kings Cross.

Rickard completed his studies in BIM (Building Information Modeling) in 2017 at the Oslo Vocational Collage (FOA) after 13 years’ working as a carpenter.

Rickard’s experience ranges from small private housing to large commercial buildings in both Norway and Sweden. He has a unique expertise in the production phase due to his profession as a carpenter, a skill which is highly valued in the process and planning of BIM modelling.

Rickard is serving both our Oslo and London offices as a BIM manager, currently working on a range of mix use and residential projects to complex commercial buildings and transformation projects.

Nick received his MArch in Architecture with distinction from the Bartlett School of Architecture in 2014 where he received both RIBA Bronze medal and RIBA Silver medal nominations, and won the RIBA Donaldson Medal and the Sir Banister Fletcher Medal for his student work. Nick is the recent recipient of the RIBA Silver Medal 2014.

Nick has worked at Foster + Partners, tutored at Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London and has led drawing workshops at the Bartlett School of Architecture. He has worked on many freelance visualisation commissions featured in international press and exhibitions such as the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition. Alongside visualisation work, Nick has worked on design and architectural projects such as The Queen's Jubilee Barge, Thames Estuary Airport, Apple Headquarters CA, West Kowloon Cultural District and Istanbul New Airport.

Alex studied at Newcastle University and the University of Greenwich, completing his Part II studies in 2016 with Distinction. Upon graduation, he was named one of Blueprint Magazine’s ‘Ones to Watch’ and was nominated for the RIBA Silver Medal. His thesis, which proposes a new form of gallery space where the paintings of JMW Turner are physically recreated through artifice and illusion, was published internationally.

Prior to joining Haptic in 2017, Alex worked at Piercy & Company in the UK, Here Studio in Melbourne, and Richards Basmajian in Hong Kong. He has also been part of teams that have built at Burning Man Festival in the Nevada Desert. His experience includes bespoke office and residential commissions in London and Australia, as well as interiors and pavilions in Hong Kong, Melbourne and the US. Since joining the practice, Alex has worked on several competition entries and a pavilion streetscape just outside Oslo.

Trained as both an architect and structural engineer, Madeleine completed her studies at the Architectural Association, the University of Sheffield and the University of Westminster. Prior to joining Haptic, she worked at practices in the UK, Switzerland and China, including HHF, Studio Weave, and Haworth Tompkins. She has worked on projects ranging from temporary pavilions and theatres to urban design, and has substantial experience of working with listed buildings, including the Grade II* listed Battersea Arts Centre.

Madeleine has lectured at the University of Sheffield and the University of London, and has taught on the AA Summer School for a number of years. She runs masterclasses for the Sorrell Foundation’s National Art & Design Saturday Club and is a guest critic at the AA, the University of Greenwich and Oxford Brookes University.

Ness started working for Haptic in 2014 after graduating with a 1st class honours from The Bartlett School of Architecture. Ness was awarded the KPF design scholarship and completed her MArch in Architecture at the Bartlett, graduating with a distinction in 2017. She has now returned to Haptic and is currently a Year 1 design tutor at the Bartlett. Ness has previously worked at Moxon Architects and as a research assistant for Smout Allen.

Ness was awarded the Fitzroy Robinson Drawing Prize and the Bronze Presidents Medal. She has had work exhibited at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition and the National Museum of Art, Architecture & Design in Norway. At Haptic Ness has worked on a wide range of projects and competitions and has a keen interest in architectural representation and illustration.

After completing his MArch at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, Ole Jacob started working for Haptic in 2017. He has previously worked as an intern at Rørbæk og Møller Arkitekter in Copenhagen, as well as a model builder for several other practices.

Ole Jacob has worked on a variety of projects ranging from pavilions to large scale public buildings. He has particularly been involved with restorations of listed buildings, and has experience with technical drawing, registration work and concept development.

Ole Jacob is especially interested in 3D-modelling and architectural representation, as well as being a keen photographer.

Hans-Christoph completed his architectural studies at RWTH Aachen in Germany and in 2014, his master thesis was nominated for the Euregional Prize for Architecture.

As well as completing his own projects, he has worked at Grüntuch Ernst Architekten, Transborder Studio and Momentum Architects. There he gained extensive knowledge in a variety of projects of different scale, ranging from competitions to the interdisciplinary work in detail planning and construction phases of complex public projects. Hans-Christoph has recently played a key role in the delivery of large hospital projects in Norway and is a firm believer in the potential that modern technology plays in the development, management and delivery of complex building projects.

Hans-Christoph joined Haptic in February 2018 to work on a variety of projects including the Straume tower and the new Government Headquarters in Oslo.

Aksel studied Architecture at the Oslo School of Architecture, where he graduated at the institute for Urbanism. He also studied at the ETSAB technical university in Barcelona and has previously worked with architectural practises in Norway and Spain.

Aksel joined Haptic in March 2018, after 10 years’ experience from the Asplan Viak office in Oslo, with an emphasis on interdisciplinary teamwork and project management. He brings extensive experience across a wide range of scales and programmes from a mix of private and public commissioners, such as healthcare, education, culture, sports and housing.

He has been part of several large-scale projects, including the Fornebu Housing and mixed-use development: a 6500-housing expansion for OBOS. He has also headed up projects such as an emergency hospital in Ski outside Oslo; a transformation of the main port area in Horten for cultural purposes; and several public schools in Norway, such as Østensjø School in Oslo. Aksel is currently managing some of the ongoing projects in Norway.

Anthony recieved his BSc and MArch from the Bartlett School of Architecture. He joined Haptic in 2013 after completing his undergraduate studies, where he recieved the Fitzroy Robinson Drawing Prize, and has returned to the practice following his postgraduate studies.

Since joining the practice, Anthony has worked in both our London and Oslo offices on a variety of building typologies, ranging from private houses and commercial office refurbishments to large scale residential developments and masterplans. He has particular experience in teams developing airport designs and a keen interest in BIM modelling.

Chris joined Haptic in 2012 and has worked on several key projects for the practice. He has particular experience in the residential, mixed use and hospitality sectors, throughout a wide range of development phases.

Chris completed both Part I and II studies at the Bartlett School of Architecture, attaining first class honours and a RIBA Bronze Medal nomination in 2008. He completed his Part III Diploma with merit at the University of Westminster in 2014.

Before joining Haptic, Chris worked at BDP and Surface Architects. Here he gained broad experience in the education sector, notably on two BSF projects for Islington and Hull.